The King Is Alive Movie Review
The King Is Alive Review

"The King Is Alive" Overview

Rating: R
2000
Cast and Crew
Director : Kristian Levring,Anders Thomas JensenProducer : Vibeke Windeløv
Screenwiter : Kristian Levring,Anders Thomas Jansen
Starring : Miles Anderson,Romane Bohringer,David Bradley,David Calder,Bruce Davison,Brion James,Vusi Kunene,Jennifer Jason Leigh,Janet McTeer,Chris Walker,Lia Williams
The premise is irresistible, combining dark humor with existential crisis. A
busload of travelers gets lost in the Namibian desert, hundreds of miles from
anywhere. After predicting this merry band of survivors will soon be killing
each other over a sip of water, one member of the party suggests they stage an
amateur performance of William Shakespeare’s King Lear. At first, it’s simply
an enjoyable way to fiddle away the endless hours. Before long, however, this
cast of laymen discover meaning and dangerous irony in the text. “You don’t
have to worry,” assures their resident Goneril (Janet McTeer): “Nobody falls in
love. And everybody dies in the end.”
Kristian Levring’s The King is Alive operates on a conceptual,
pseudo-intellectual level, perhaps a touch too orderly to convey true madness.
As the players become embroiled in King Lear, jealous Catherine (Romane
Bohringer) plots against young hipster Gina (Jennifer Jason Leigh), who won the
much-envied role of Cordelia. Meanwhile, disgruntled housewife Liz (McTeer)
seduces the exotic black bus driver (Vusi Kunene) before the very eyes of her
passive husband (Bruce Davison). As the actor playing King Lear (Brion James)
quickly falls to pieces from dysentery, the scholarly director (David Bradley)
watches the proceedings with detached malice, chuckling, “Is man no more than
this?” And whatever became of Aussie survivalist Jack (Miles Anderson), who
took off into the desert to find help?
The cast does what it can with the material, bravely parlaying the
Shakespearean text with everyman incompetence. McTeer, as always, attacks her
role with brittle nerves of steel, finding perceptive hints of dignity and
righteousness in a shrewish bitch. She finds the perfect scene partner in
Davison, whose faraway stare and painfully angry grin register even when the
character is standing around doing nothing. The emotional highpoint is Davison’
s fateful decision of walking away from King Lear, his cheating wife, and the
whole thing -- tromping through the desert dunes as the awestruck camera charts
his progress. His maniacal laughter is a relief: At least someone gets the
nasty joke God has played on them.
Too little is used of the late Brion James (who you may remember as replicant
Leon from Blade Runner), playing the Texas businessman, Ashley. One wishes his
fleeting, foggy-eyed square dance became a scene unto itself instead of a ten
second insert shot. Jennifer Jason Leigh also doesn’t fare so well, typecast
once again as the girl who falls apart. Levring indulges her moans and shrieks
as the brutish Charles (David Calder) makes sexual advances on her.
Shot on digital video, the rough and tumble “you are here” documentary approach
expected from Dogme95 works to harrowing effect. The desert is beautiful and
strange, with mountains of sand dissipating in the wind under the blinding
white heat of the sun. Dawn and dusk are conveyed through tints of blue, while
the kerosene lamps provide creepy shadows in their entrenched huts during the
bleak evenings. There’s a majestic grandeur in the cinematography not found in
Lars von Trier’s visual shitstorm, The Idiots -- though one could present a
convincing argument that inept camerawork would have been a boon companion to
the company of madmen.
There’s too much structure in The King is Alive, paying far too much attention
to mathematical pairings of couples scheming against one another. Peter Brook’
s Marat/Sade allowed the inmates of an insane asylum the opportunity to put on
a show, and there was pure chaos, energy, unpredictable violence, and cathartic
song. In the same way von Trier’s The Idiots presents the world as an
incoherent babble, Marat/Sade found meaning in civil disorder. Those movies
stripped away the filters of plot and composition, creating mini-explosions of
true feeling that we could use more of in today’s conservative climate.
For better or for worse, Levring summons up the excruciating monotony of being
stranded in no man’s land. Unshaven, bedraggled, filthy, and wild-eyed with
crazy fright, the cast of thespians is saddled with the camera’s humorless
gaze. Perhaps they should have put on a musical. As the characters descend
into varying levels of madness, an audience may grow numb to their torment (on
display for your viewing pleasure). There’s nothing left but the bitter taste
of sand. And nothing will come of nothing, after all.
And the queeen is squatting.
Reviewer: Jeremiah Kipp



